Columbia Lumber & Mfg. Co. v. Globe Indemnity Co.

164 S.E. 916, 166 S.C. 408, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 13, 1932
Docket13448
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 164 S.E. 916 (Columbia Lumber & Mfg. Co. v. Globe Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbia Lumber & Mfg. Co. v. Globe Indemnity Co., 164 S.E. 916, 166 S.C. 408, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 158 (S.C. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Stabrer.

This case arose under a contractor’s surety bond. On December 3, 1929, a written contract for the construction of a hotel building at Columbia, S. C., was entered into by the Angle-Blackford Company, a contractor, on the one hand, and the Barringer Hotel interests and W. R. and L. S. Barringer, owners, on the other. On January 18, 1930, certain changes were agreed upon and incorporated in a written agreement called “Addenda.” For convenience we shall refer to these two papers as the first contract. Under the provisions of this contract, its becoming effective was contingent upon the owner’s obtaining certain financial assistance in Columbia, and the owners -were allowed to substitute a corporation, to be chartered to take the place of the Barringer Hotel interests, to assume all obligations of the contract as fully as though it had been named originally therein, the contract to bear the signature of W. R. and L. S. Barringer, personally, until such time as the corporation should be formed.

Subsequently the Barringers, having been successful in their financial arrangements, incorporated the Columbia Hotel Company, and on March 11, 1930, a written contract was made between that company, as owner, and the AngleBlackford Company, as contractor, which we shall refer to as the second contract. The two contracts cover the construction of the same building and are practically identical, except as to the names of the contracting owners.

On March 11, 1930, the date of the second contract, the Angle-Blackford Company, as principal, and Globe Indemnity Company, as surety, gave a bond to the Columbia Hotel Company, as owner, conditioned for the faithful performance on the part of the' principal, of its contract, evi *410 denced by a written agreement dated December 3, 1929, and addenda dated January 18, 1930, with the owner for the construction of a hotel building, and also for the payment of all persons who might have contracts directly with the principal for labor or materials used in the project. The bond also provided “that any alterations which may be made in the terms of the contract, or in the work to be done under it, * * * or any other forbearance on the part of either the owner or the principal to the other shall not in any way release the principal and the surety or sureties, or either or any of them * * * from their liability hereunder, notice to the surety or sureties of any such alteration, extension or forbearance being hereby waived.”

The complaint alleged that the plaintiffs, Columbia Lumber & Manufacturing Company and E. R. Heyward, trading as W. B. Guimarin & Co., in the course of the construction of the hotel, furnished to the Angle-Blackford Company certain labor and materials, upon which certain balances were due, and asked judgment against the Globe Indemnity Company on the bond for such balances, with interest from the dates the final payments were due under their respective contracts.

The indemnity company by its answer alleged that the bond executed referred specifically to a contract which had been abandoned and under which no work had been done, and that a new contract dated March 11, 1930, had been entered into, with which the company was not familiar or concerned and as to the contents of which it was not advised ; and for that reason it denied all liability to the plaintiffs.

The case was referred to the master for Richland County, who, after several references, filed his report, in which he construed the terms of the bond as rendering the indemnity company liable, and recommended judgment for the plaintiffs in certain stated amounts, including interest. The indemnity company filed exceptions to this report, and upon *411 a hearing before Judge W. H. Townsend an order was passed confirming the findings of the master in all respects, except as to interest, which was disallowed. From this decree both sides appealed, the defendant as to its liability on the bond — the main question — and the plaintiffs as to the interest.

The question involved in the appeal, as stated by counsel for the appellant indemnity company, are:

(1) Can a bond, expressly limited by its own terms, be extended to cover a subsequent contract for the same work, made with a different party?

(2) Can a surety on a contractor’s bond be held liable on its bond for interest on an open account of its principal, prior to the reduction of this open account to a judgment?

As to the first question, appellant contends, in support of its position, that it bonded the first contract which was abandoned; that it was a stranger to the second contract, under which the hotel was constructed; that the execution of the second contract, particularly because of the substitution of the Columbia Hotel Company as contracting owner, created a novation, which discharged the first contract, and therefore released the surety; and that, if such substitution was not a novation, it was at least such a material variance in the contract as would release the surety, and that the surety was materially damaged thereby. Respondents contend, on the other hand, that the second contract was merely a recodification of the first, and was prepared and executed conformably to a provision in the first contract, and that therefore the bond would cover any work done under the second contract.

The contract insured is decribed in the bond as being one between the Columbia Hotel Company, as owner, and the Angle-Blackford Company as contractor, contained in an agreement dated December 3, 1929, and addenda dated January 18, 1930. This description is not entirely applicable either to the first or to the second contract; in so far as the *412 contract dates are concerned, it fits the first contract, and, in so far as the names of the contracting parties are concerned, it fits the second contract, that of March 11, 1930. As the last named contract was the only one to which the Columbia Hotel Company was a party, it might be contended that, if the bond did not cover this contract, it covered no contract at all. The appellant, however, does not gó so far as to take this position, insisting rather that the bond covered the first contract. But there would seem to be at least as good reason for saying, under the terms of the bond as drawn, that it. covers the contract dated March 11, 1930, between the Angle-Blackford Company and the Columbia Hotel Company, as for saying that it covers the contract dated December 3, 1929, and January 18, 1930, between the Angle-Blackford Company and the Barringers.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.E. 916, 166 S.C. 408, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbia-lumber-mfg-co-v-globe-indemnity-co-sc-1932.